PAA File Format: Difference between revisions

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<big><big>PAA texture file structure</big></big>
Of the many image file formats out there, such as jpeg, or gif, Bohemia Interactive choose to use a specially developed file format (paa) as the base texture file for all engine types.


==Introduction==
The reason for this is the raw data within the file contain mipmaps which be passed directly to Microsoft's Direct X as a DXT1 picture (eg) without further massaging.


Of the many image file formats 'out there', such as jpeg, such as gif. BI choose to use a specially developed file format (paa) as the base texture file for all engine types.
All engines except Elite also support JPG files (but they have no transparency). Most of encoded mipmap formats in pax files do.


The reason for this is the raw data within the file can be passed directly to Microsoft's Direct X as a DXT1 picture (eg) without further massaging.
=== PAC files ===


While all engines except Elite also support JPG files, PAA files can result in much better performance.
.pac files are (almost) synonomous with .paa. In the origins of OFP cwc. paa were meant to be two tone colors (black & white or grayscale) and paC = colour.


==Main Format==
The distinction does not exist. All engines treat pac or paa equally. They are referred to as paX files in the rest of this document.


Overall structure of a Paa file is
Note however that {{arma2}}'s TGAviewer *cannot* read a palete index {{hl|.paa}} extension. only {{hl|.pac}} extensions. (the contents can be identical)


struct overall
=== {{Name|ofp|short}} Demo Files ===
{
 
  ushort TypeOfPaa;
The initial 'proof of concept' for {{ofp}} released in 1997, was a demonstration of an island with models and textures.
  struct HeaderTags {...}; // '''OPTIONAL'''
 
  ushort EndofTags;              // always zero
These pax files can still be read by tgaviewer! (and pal2pace)
  struct MipMap_DataBlocks{....};
 
  byte  EndOfMaps[6];            // always zero
The *only* difference between these, and subsequent pax files is that the index pallet appears at beginning of file. In other words
};
 
* There is NO header type, Pallet index is assumed.
* There are NO taggs.
* Other than this, demo files are 100% identical to {{Name|ofp|short}}'s Pallet index including the use of run length compression.
 
=== Main Format ===


Every PAA file starts with a '''TypeOfPaa'''
Overall structure of a pax file is


ushort TypeOfPaa;  // type of texture, known values are
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
  // 0xFF01 DXT1 compressed texture (may have 1 bit alpha map, check MSDN documentation for details)
struct overall
  // 0x1555 Uncompressed RGBA 5:5:5:1 texture
{
          // 0x4444 Uncompressed RGBA 4:4:4:4 texture
ushort TypeOfPaX; // OPTIONAL
  // 0x8080 Uncompressed Luminosity/Alpha map. Actual color of texture is derived from AVGCTAGG tag?
Tagg Taggs[...]; // OPTIONAL
  // 0xFF03 XBox & ArmA only. DXT3 compressed texture
Palette Palette[...];
  // 0xFF05 XBox & ArmA only. DXT5 compressed texture
MipMap MipMaps[...];
                    // 0x4747 Uncompressed Index Palette texture(P8) '''SPECIAL CASE''' see notes
ushort Always0;
                    // added '''TypeOfPaa working in Oxygen 2 Full''':
};
  // 0xFF02 DXT2 compressed texture
</syntaxhighlight>
  // 0xFF04 DXT4 compressed texture
  // 0x8888 RGBA 8:8:8:8 texture


followed by '''optional''' header tags


struct PAA_Tag {
== TypeOfPaX (optional) ==
byte    name[8]; // name of tag is actually reversed when written in file,
// so OFFSTAGG would be written as GGATSFFO. See  below for known tags.
ULONG tag_size; // size of this tag
byte    data[tag_size]; // size * bytes of actual data
}


followed by an EndofTags ushort of zero, indicating, no more tags !!
With the sole exception of OFP index palettes and demo, all paX files begin with a 2 byte 'type' signature.
OFP index palettes have ''no'' type, they begin with tagg structures immediately. demo files have neither, and begin with the index pallet.


===Special Case===
{| class="wikitable align-center"
TypeOfPaa 0x4747 Uncompressed Index Palette texture
! rowspan="2" | PaX Type
! colspan="6" | Game
|-
! {{Name|ofp|short}}<br>Demo
! {{GVI|ofp|1.00}}
! {{GVI|arma1|1.00}}
! {{GVI|arma2|1.00}}
! Oxygen&nbsp;2
|-
| 0xFF01 DXT1
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
|-
| 0xFF02 DXT2
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
|-
| 0xFF03 DXT3
| colspan="6" style="text-align: center" | {{Icon|unknown}}
|-
| 0xFF04 DXT4
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
|-
| 0xFF05 DXT5
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
|-
| 0x4444 RGBA 4:4:4:4
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
|-
| 0x1555 RGBA 5:5:5:1
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
|-
| 0x8888 RGBA 8:8:8:8
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
|-
| 0x8080 GRAY w Alpha
| {{Icon|unchecked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
| {{Icon|checked}}
|}


This is a corrupt entry in the sense that it does not have a TypeOfPaa !!!!!
''''Index Pallets only occur in {{ofp}} and demo''' Later versions of TGAViewer still 'understand' them IF and only IF they have .pac extensions. Under this circumstance they are translated as ARGB8888 (and saved as such)
It is the lead in bytes to a standard AVCGTAGG. The next block of data is, the palette. Followed by 'standard' mip-data blocks. Urrrrgh.


''Indecipherable commentary from Feersum''
Note that information on DXT formats can be found at {{Link|https://www.khronos.org/opengl/wiki/S3_Texture_Compression}}.


If format not 0x4747 then end of header tag data is marked by UWORD 0x0000,
else this is a `size of palette` and next block it`s a palette(sizeof = `size of palette` * 3)''
Palette storeg in BGR format.


==HexDump==
== Taggs ==
[[Image:Paacformat.gif]]


==Known header tags==
Taggs do not exist for demo pax files.


There are several knowns header tags.
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
Tagg
{
char signature[4]; // always "GGAT"
char name[4]; // name of the tagg in reversed order (for example: "CGVA")
ulong dataLen;
byte data[dataLen];
}
</syntaxhighlight>


===OFFSTAGG===
Taggs are read until no "GGAT" signature is encountered. Palette structure follows.
Sizeof Data (16 x ULONGS)
Example:
GGATSFFO = 6 entries
256 x 128 Size=16384
128 x 64 Size=4096
64 x 32 Size=1024
32 x 16 Size=256
16 x 8 Size=64
8 x 4 Size=16


MipMap data is presented in 'blocks'. One or more 'blocks' exist in a paa file.
=== General ===


This is a pointless and redundant tag that declares where each of these blocks are in the file, relative to start of file.
Structurally, all TAGG's are optional and can occur multiple times. In practice:


The location of each block is already known, relative to the size of the previous block (if any). So, although almost always present in paa files, it's use, is redundant.
* At least one TAGG exists for ALL types, including index palettes.
* Any TAGG if it occurs, only occurs, once.
* TAGG order of presentation is


This tag always contains 16 ULONG offsets. Each one is a hard offset to actual mipmap data relative to start of file.
AVG // always first
MAX // always 2nd etc...
FLAG
SWIZ or PROC (not seen together)
OFFS // always last


Not all entries are used (obvuously) since most paa files contain less than 16 mipmaps. Unused offsets contain the value 0x00000000. There are no known examples of splattered offset entries. All offsets after the first 0 entry are 0 as well.
* ALL TAGG's begin with an AVG with the sole exception of *some* GREY .paX's
* MAX is almost follows an AVG
* FLAG, PROC, and SWIZ are entirely optional. They may or may not occur.
* PROC if present is only used in DXT1 types
* OFP Palette Indexes ONLY have an AVG
* OFFS is almost always present (if not, the engine builds it as required, when required, anyway)


===AVGCTAGG===
=== AVGCTAGG ===


Average Colour
Average Colour


Sizeof Data (1 x ULONG)
* This tag contains average color of texture, probably used in rendering the 8:8 Grey & alpha textures.
example: GGATCGVA = FF443D39
* Always present, and always first in list with the sole exception of *some* GRAY .paX's


This tag contains average color of texture, probably used in rendering 8:8 luminosity/alpha textures.
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
{
char  "GGATCGVA";
ulong len; // 4 bytes
ulong RGBA; // FF443D39
}
</syntaxhighlight>


===FLAGTAGG===
=== MAXCTAGG ===


Sizeof Data (1 x ULONG)
* Generally always present. Always follows immediately after an AVG
example: GGATGALG = 0 // range, 0 to 2


Marks if texture contains transparency. Value 1 means basic transparency, 2 means alpha channel is not interpolated. This flag should be always present in LOD textures with 1-bit alpha with value of 2 or there will be "ghost outlines" on LOD textures when viewed from distance. Note that this flag must be present in texture file when binarizing model, because Binarize stores information about how to render textures in actual P3D file.
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
{
char "GGATCXAM";
ulong len; // 4 bytes
ulong data; // FFFFFFFFF no other value seen so far
}
</syntaxhighlight>


===ArmA / Elite===
Contains color of brightest pixel in texture?
 
=== FLAGTAGG ===


Purpose of these tags are not yet known.
* Optional, but will always occur immediately after a MAXC when present


====MAXCTAGG====
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
{
char "GGATGALF";
ulong len; // 4 bytes
ulong range; // 0 to 2
}
</syntaxhighlight>


Sizeof Data (1 x ULONG)
Marks if texture contains transparency. Value 1 means basic transparency, 2 means alpha channel is not interpolated.
example: GGATCXAM = FFFFFFFFF // no other value seen so far
This flag should be always present in LOD textures with 1-bit alpha with value of 2 or there will be "ghost outlines" on LOD textures when viewed from distance.
Note that this flag must be present in texture file when binarizing model, because Binarize stores information about how to render textures in actual P3D file.


Contains color of brightest pixel in texture?
=== SWIZTAGG ===


====SWIZTAGG====
* Optional


Sizeof Data (1 x ULONG)
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
example: GGATZIWS = 0x05040203
{
char "GGATZIWS";
ulong len; // 4 bytes
ulong data; // 0x05040203
}
</syntaxhighlight>


Swizzle is apparently used to modify texture components processing like swizzle modifiers in pixel shaders. For example ArmA sky texture has green channel stored in alpha channel and inversed to take advantage from feature that in DXT5 64 bits are used for alpha channel in each block and 64 bits for RBG, giving double the accuracy to green channel as opposed to storing texture just normally.
Swizzle is apparently used to modify texture components processing like swizzle modifiers in pixel shaders.
For example {{Name|arma1|short}} sky texture has green channel stored in alpha channel and inversed to take advantage from feature that in DXT5 64 bits are used for alpha channel in each block and 64 bits for RBG, giving double the accuracy to green channel as opposed to storing texture just normally.


Exact format of swizzle data is still unknown.
Exact format of swizzle data is still unknown.
swizzle data:
swizzle data:
char channelSwizzleA;  
 
char channelSwizzleR;  
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
char channelSwizzleG;  
char channelSwizzleA;
char channelSwizzleR;
char channelSwizzleG;
char channelSwizzleB;
char channelSwizzleB;
</syntaxhighlight>


format of swizzle char:
format of swizzle char:
bits 7-4 = 0;
 
bit 3 - "1" flag. All channel data must be set to 0xff;
bits 7-4 = 0;
bit 2 - "negate flag". Channel data must be negated.  
bit 3 - "1" flag. All channel data must be set to 0xff;
bit 1-0 - number of color channel:
bit 2 - "negate flag". Channel data must be negated.
00 - Alpha channel
bit 1-0 - number of color channel:
01 - Red channel
00 - Alpha channel
10 - Green channel
01 - Red channel
11 - Blue channel
10 - Green channel
11 - Blue channel


for example (*_nohq.paa textures)
for example (*_nohq.paa textures)
swizzle data is:
swizzle data is:
0x05 - Alpha, Negated, stored in Red;
0x04 - Red, Negated, stored in Alpha;
0x02 - Green, Stored as is;
0x03 - Blue, Stored as is;


==Mipmap data==
0x05 - Alpha, Negated, stored in Red;
0x04 - Red, Negated, stored in Alpha;
0x02 - Green, Stored as is;
0x03 - Blue, Stored as is;
 
=== PROCTAGG ===
 
* Only ever seen with some DXT1 types
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
{
char "GGATCORP";
ulong len; //  strlen(text)
char text // NOT ASCIIz
}
</syntaxhighlight>


After end-of-header marker, actual mipmap data follows. Tag OFFSTAGG (if supplied) contains (up to) 16 offsets. Each offset points to the following struct type (relative to start of the file).
this is a non asciiz string (not zero terminated)


  struct Mipmap_Data {
example:
UWORD width; // width of this mipmap
 
UWORD height; // height of this mipmap
x = ((u+1)*0.5);
UCHAR size[3]; // size of compressed texture data. this is 24-bit unsigned integer.  
y = ((v+1)*0.5);
UCHAR data[size]; // actual texture data
 
if (y<0.5) then
  {
  sharpOut = 20;
  sharpIn = 60;
 
  offset = x-0.5;
  if (offset<0) then
  {
    edge = (1+offset)^sharpOut;
  }
  else
  {
    edge = (1-offset)^sharpIn;
  };
  res = edge*y*2;
}
else
{
  sharpOut = 20-40*(y-0.5);
  sharpIn = 60-125*(y-0.5);
 
  offset = x-0.5;
  if (offset<0) then
  {
    edge = (1+offset)^sharpOut;
  }
  else
  {
    edge = (1-offset)^sharpIn;
  };
  res = edge;
  sdCoef = y * 2 - 1;
  shoreDisappear = 1 - sdCoef^2;
  res = res * shoreDisappear;
  };
  };
a = 1;
r = res;
g = res;
b = res;
=== OFFSTAGG ===
* Almost always present
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
{
char  "GGATSFFO";
ulong len; // 16 * sizeof(ulong)
ulong offsets[16];
}
</syntaxhighlight>
Example:
= 6 entries. last 10 unused
256 x 128 Size=16384
128 x 64 Size=4096
64 x 32 Size=1024
32 x 16 Size=256
16 x 8 Size=64
8 x 4 Size=16
MipMap data is presented in 'blocks'. One or more 'blocks' exist in a pax file.


If OFFSTAGG is not supplied, then the next mipmap block is indicated by the size of the previous one.
This tag declares where each of these blocks are in the file, relative to start of file.


Note that the size reflects the size of data in the file '''not''' the actual size if that data if is compressed.
The location of each block is already known, relative to the size of the previous block (if any). So, although almost always present in pax files, it is use, is redundant.


The size of output data for Dct1 format is  (width*height / 2)
This tag always contains 16 ULONG offsets. Each one is a hard offset to actual mipmap data relative to start of file.


Size of output data for Dct5 format is  (width*height)
Not all entries are used (obviously) since most pax files contain less than 16 mipmaps. Unused offsets contain the value 0x00000000.
There are no known examples of splattered offset entries. All offsets after the first 0 entry are 0 as well.


Texture types 0x4444,0x4747,0x1555, 0x8080 and 0x8888, ie, non DXT, are always stored in compressed format. See Example above for detailed look .


DXT1 textures are stored "as is" ( see ->[http://www.sjbrown.co.uk/?code=squish DXTn compress/decompress]).
== Palette ==


===Decompression Code===
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
<pre>
Palette
/*
by Flea
*/
int LZSSDecode(unsigned char * in,unsigned char * out,int szin,int szout)
{
{
        szin = szin > 0? szin: 0x7fffffff;
ushort nPaletteTriplets; // always 0 except for index palette type
int  i, j, k, r = 0, pr, pi = 0,po = 0;
bytes BGR_Palette[nPaletteTriplets][3]; // only exists if nPaletteTriplets > 0
unsigned int  flags = 0;
}
        unsigned char buf[0x100F], c;
</syntaxhighlight>
for (i = 0; i < 0x100F; buf[i] = 0x20, i++);
 
while (pi < szin && po < szout)
palette triplets when they exist, consist of '''BGR''' values. Note the reversal from the expected order.
        {
 
if (((flags >>= 1) & 256) == 0)
 
                {
== Mipmap ==
                        if(pi >= szin)break;
 
        c = in[pi++];
Mipmaps are in contiguous blocks that extend to end of file.
flags = c | 0xff00;
 
}
There is nothing strange about Mipmaps. Each mipmap is simply a rectangular texture (almost always square) and each one conforms to 2^n dimensions.
if (flags & 1)
 
                {
Each mipmap defines increasingly poorer resolution. The highest (first) mimpap is THE texture, each successively smaller one is one quarter the size.
                        if(pi >= szin || po >= szout)break;
It progresses in smallness down to a minimum of 2 x any other 2^n or, any other 2^n x 2. For a square texture, this is simply a 2 x 2 matrix.
                        c = in[pi++];
 
                        out[po++] = c;
 
                        buf[r++] = c;
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
                        r &= 0xfff;
Mipmap
} else
{
                {
ushort width; // width of this mipmap
                        if(pi + 1 >= szin)break;
ushort height; // height of this mipmap
i = in[pi++];
if (INDEX PALLETE)
j = in[pi++];
{
i |= (j & 0xf0) << 4;
if (width==0x4D2 && height==0x223D) // special 1234 x 8765 signature
                        j  = (j & 0x0f) + 2;
{
                        pr = r;
ushort width; // actual width
for (k = 0; k <= j; k++)
ushort height; // actual height
                        {
// use -signed- lzss compression for this block (introduced for for resistance pax files.
c = buf[(pr - i + k) & 0xfff];
                                if(po >= szout)break;
        out[po++] = c;
                                buf[r++] = c;
                                r &= 0xfff;
}
}
}
//  else use runlength Compression for this block // used by demo and cwc pax files
}
if (width && height)
{
byte size[3]; // size of texture data in file. this is 24-bit unsigned integer.
byte data[size]; // actual texture data compressed or otherwise
}
}
return pi;
};
</syntaxhighlight>
 
The last mipmap is a dummy consisting of zero width and height with NO FURTHER DATA
 
The size triplet reflects the size of '''compressed''' data in the file '''not''' necessarily the actual size of the data.
 
 
== Compression ==
 
'''ALL''' non DXT signatures are unconditionally compressed using '''signed''' LZSS. Index Pallets use this too, OR, runlength encoding.
 
There are two wrinkles to LZSS compression not encountered in other uses of the same algorithm (pbo, p3d, wrp eg).
 
 
* The >1024 rule does not apply. ALL data is compressed. The end result is the smaller box sizes are most often larger on disk.
* The checksum following the data (all data sizes are actually -4 their 'real' length) is SIGNED addititive. All other lzss checksums used elsewhere in bis are UNsigned additive.
 
 
example:
Type: RGBA 4:4:4:4 texture
AVGC: F5A9A9AB
256 x  128 Real Size 65536. Size in file  11770
128 x  64 Real Size 16384. Size in file  3521
  64 x  32 Real Size  4096. Size in file  1148
  32 x  16 Real Size  1024. Size in file    407
  16 x    8 Real Size  256. Size in file    169
  8 x    4 Real Size    64. Size in file    57
  4 x    2 Real Size    16. Size in file    22 <<<<<
 
the result of decompression of any type (lzo, lzss or runlength is '''encoded''' data. The encoding is, perhaps obviously,dependent on the paxType:
 
 
'''encoded''' sizes are a further means of compression.
* width x height  is the number of pixels to display. Since all output to a screen is ultimately expressed as RGBA 4 byte integers.
* width x height x 4 is the size of the ultimate output IN BYTES.
 
Not so the '''encoded''' array.
* INDEX width*height // each byte is an index to a color table
* DXT1 width*height/2 // 1 nibble per pixel
* DXT2 width*height // not used
* DXT3 width*height // not used
* DXT4 width*height // not used
* DXT5 width*height // one byte per pixel
 
* RGB4444 width*height*2 // 4 nibbles per color
* RGB5551 width*height*2 // ditto
* RGB565 width*height*2 // ditto (not used)
* GREY width*height*2 // one byte alpha, one byte 'grey'
* RGB8888 width*height*4 // straight rgba output (un-encoded)
 
=== Before {{arma2}} ===
 
DXT textures are stored "as is" in the file. Therefore the DXT data could be directly passed to the graphic hardware.
For software decoding of DXT textures see {{Link|http://code.google.com/p/libsquish/|DXTn compress/decompress}}
 
=== After {{arma2}} ===
 
DXT formats are '''potentially''' compressed.
 
(All other formats remain the same with unconditional '''lzss''' compression)
 
{{arma2}} introduces '''LZO''' compression for DXT. The criteria for DXT-LZO compression is having the top bit of the width paramater set.
 
Note that under this circumstance, the width bit must be masked before any size calculations
 
This bit is set when size on disk for dxt formats != expected size . (See above table). It is either a 'safety bit' for the unusual circumstance of size being same, or, simply a flag to indicate lzo compression.
 
Either way, there are (currently) no known instances of dxt compression where sizes are same, and quite obviously, all unequal sizes must, by defintion, be lzo compresssed.
 
Note also, that this is, truly, conditional compression. Only larger dimensions (256x256) eg are treated in this manner. Lesser value mipmaps in the same pax file, remain un altered.
 
=== Index Palette Compression ===
 
If the file doesn't start with a known PaX type the data array of the mipmaps contain the indices to the color palette (which appears just before mipmaps and only for palette type).
 
'''TWO''' (2) types of compression are in force determined by the special structure of index pallette mipmaps (see above)
 
* Standard LZSS.
 
if the signature for width and height IS 1234 x 8765 then standard lzss compression is used, using, the next four bytes as width and height.
 
otherwise:
 
A very basic "compression", which even can make the data slightly bigger, is used. The data is split into blocks of the following structure:
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp">
struct block
{
byte flag;
byte data[...];
}
}
</pre>
</syntaxhighlight>
 
The flag can be of two different types. If the most significant bit of flag is zero, it tells you how much bytes to read. If flag is 0x05 for example you have to read 6 bytes (always one more then the value of flag).
If the most significant bit of flag is one it tells you how often the next byte is repeated. If flag is 0x82 for example the value after the flag byte is repeated 3 times (always one more than (flagvalue - 0x80)).
 
Note that with this, special, compression, there is no checksum.
 
Index palette Mipmaps can have mixtures of both types.
 
 
== Addenda ==
 
=== Decompression Code ===
 
see [[Compressed LZSS File Format]]
 
=== HexDump ===


===End of Mipmap(s)===
The 0x4747 format mentioned in this picture indicates index palette format, because 0x4747 is the "GG" of "GGAT" signature.
After last mipmap, there are six (6) bytes set to 0x00 to mark end of texture data. And,consequently, end of file. No further data is known to occur after this End mark.


==Alpha channel interpolation==
[[File:Paacformat.gif]]
 
=== Alpha channel interpolation ===


These two images visualize difference between alpha channel interpolation (FLAGTAGG header tag value).
These two images visualize difference between alpha channel interpolation (FLAGTAGG header tag value).


===FLAGTAGG = 1, interpolated alpha channel (default behaviour)===
==== FLAGTAGG = 1, interpolated alpha channel (default behaviour) ====
[[Image:paa_alpha_channel_default.jpg]]
[[File:paa_alpha_channel_default.jpg]]
 
==== FLAGTAGG = 2, alpha channel interpolation disabled ====
[[File:paa_alpha_channel_no_interpolation.jpg]]
 
 
== Bibliography ==


===FLAGTAGG = 2, alpha channel interpolation disabled===
Feersum's original posting on BIS forums: {{Link|link= http://www.flashpoint1985.com/cgi-bin/ikonboard311/ikonboard.cgi?;act=ST;f=50;t=38131|text= Paa/pac texture format documentation}}
[[Image:paa_alpha_channel_no_interpolation.jpg]]
MSDN documentation on DXT1 textures: {{Link|http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url{{=}}/library/en-us/directx9_c/Opaque_and_1_Bit_Alpha_Textures.asp|DirectX: Opaque and 1-Bit Alpha Textures}}
Squish Compression {{Link|http://www.sjbrown.co.uk/?code{{=}}squish|DXTn compress/decompress}}


==Bibliography==
Feersum's original posting on BIS forums: [http://www.flashpoint1985.com/cgi-bin/ikonboard311/ikonboard.cgi?;act=ST;f=50;t=38131 Paa/pac texture format documentation]
MSDN documentation on DXT1 textures: [http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url=/library/en-us/directx9_c/Opaque_and_1_Bit_Alpha_Textures.asp DirectX: Opaque and 1-Bit Alpha Textures]
Squish Compression [http://www.sjbrown.co.uk/?code=squish DXTn compress/decompress]


[[Category:ArmA: File Formats]]
[[Category:BIS File Formats]]
[[Category:Operation Flashpoint Elite: Editing]]
[[Category:Operation Flashpoint: Missions]]
[[category:Operation Flashpoint: Editing]]
[[Category: File extensions|PAA]]
[[Category:BIS_File_Formats]]

Latest revision as of 22:50, 8 April 2024

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Disclaimer: This page describes internal undocumented structures of Bohemia Interactive software.

This page contains unofficial information.

Some usage of this information may constitute a violation of the rights of Bohemia Interactive and is in no way endorsed or recommended by Bohemia Interactive.
Bohemia Interactive is not willing to tolerate use of such tools if it contravenes any general licenses granted to end users of this community wiki or BI products.

Of the many image file formats out there, such as jpeg, or gif, Bohemia Interactive choose to use a specially developed file format (paa) as the base texture file for all engine types.

The reason for this is the raw data within the file contain mipmaps which be passed directly to Microsoft's Direct X as a DXT1 picture (eg) without further massaging.

All engines except Elite also support JPG files (but they have no transparency). Most of encoded mipmap formats in pax files do.

PAC files

.pac files are (almost) synonomous with .paa. In the origins of OFP cwc. paa were meant to be two tone colors (black & white or grayscale) and paC = colour.

The distinction does not exist. All engines treat pac or paa equally. They are referred to as paX files in the rest of this document.

Note however that Arma 2's TGAviewer *cannot* read a palete index .paa extension. only .pac extensions. (the contents can be identical)

OFP Demo Files

The initial 'proof of concept' for Operation Flashpoint released in 1997, was a demonstration of an island with models and textures.

These pax files can still be read by tgaviewer! (and pal2pace)

The *only* difference between these, and subsequent pax files is that the index pallet appears at beginning of file. In other words

  • There is NO header type, Pallet index is assumed.
  • There are NO taggs.
  • Other than this, demo files are 100% identical to OFP's Pallet index including the use of run length compression.

Main Format

Overall structure of a pax file is

struct overall
{
	ushort		TypeOfPaX;	// OPTIONAL
	Tagg		Taggs[...];	// OPTIONAL
	Palette		Palette[...];
	MipMap		MipMaps[...];
	ushort		Always0;
};


TypeOfPaX (optional)

With the sole exception of OFP index palettes and demo, all paX files begin with a 2 byte 'type' signature. OFP index palettes have no type, they begin with tagg structures immediately. demo files have neither, and begin with the index pallet.

PaX Type Game
OFP
Demo
Logo A0.png1.00 Logo A1 black.png1.00 Logo A2.png1.00 Oxygen 2
0xFF01 DXT1 Unchecked Checked Checked Checked Checked
0xFF02 DXT2 Unchecked Unchecked Unchecked Unchecked Checked
0xFF03 DXT3 Unknown
0xFF04 DXT4 Unchecked Unchecked Unchecked Unchecked Checked
0xFF05 DXT5 Unchecked Unchecked Checked Checked Unchecked
0x4444 RGBA 4:4:4:4 Unchecked Checked Unchecked Checked Unchecked
0x1555 RGBA 5:5:5:1 Unchecked Unchecked Checked Checked Unchecked
0x8888 RGBA 8:8:8:8 Unchecked Unchecked Unchecked Unchecked Checked
0x8080 GRAY w Alpha Unchecked Checked Checked Checked Checked

'Index Pallets only occur in Operation Flashpoint and demo Later versions of TGAViewer still 'understand' them IF and only IF they have .pac extensions. Under this circumstance they are translated as ARGB8888 (and saved as such)

Note that information on DXT formats can be found at https://www.khronos.org/opengl/wiki/S3_Texture_Compression.


Taggs

Taggs do not exist for demo pax files.

Tagg
{
	char	signature[4];	// always "GGAT"
	char	name[4];		// name of the tagg in reversed order (for example: "CGVA")
	ulong	dataLen;
	byte	data[dataLen];
}

Taggs are read until no "GGAT" signature is encountered. Palette structure follows.

General

Structurally, all TAGG's are optional and can occur multiple times. In practice:

  • At least one TAGG exists for ALL types, including index palettes.
  • Any TAGG if it occurs, only occurs, once.
  • TAGG order of presentation is
AVG		// always first
MAX		// always 2nd etc...
FLAG
SWIZ or PROC (not seen together)
OFFS	// always last
  • ALL TAGG's begin with an AVG with the sole exception of *some* GREY .paX's
  • MAX is almost follows an AVG
  • FLAG, PROC, and SWIZ are entirely optional. They may or may not occur.
  • PROC if present is only used in DXT1 types
  • OFP Palette Indexes ONLY have an AVG
  • OFFS is almost always present (if not, the engine builds it as required, when required, anyway)

AVGCTAGG

Average Colour

  • This tag contains average color of texture, probably used in rendering the 8:8 Grey & alpha textures.
  • Always present, and always first in list with the sole exception of *some* GRAY .paX's
{
	char  "GGATCGVA";
	ulong len;	// 4 bytes
	ulong RGBA;	// FF443D39
}

MAXCTAGG

  • Generally always present. Always follows immediately after an AVG
{
	char	"GGATCXAM";
	ulong	len;	// 4 bytes
	ulong	data;	// FFFFFFFFF no other value seen so far
}

Contains color of brightest pixel in texture?

FLAGTAGG

  • Optional, but will always occur immediately after a MAXC when present
{
	char	"GGATGALF";
	ulong	len;	// 4 bytes
	ulong	range;	// 0 to 2
}

Marks if texture contains transparency. Value 1 means basic transparency, 2 means alpha channel is not interpolated. This flag should be always present in LOD textures with 1-bit alpha with value of 2 or there will be "ghost outlines" on LOD textures when viewed from distance. Note that this flag must be present in texture file when binarizing model, because Binarize stores information about how to render textures in actual P3D file.

SWIZTAGG

  • Optional
{
	char	"GGATZIWS";
	ulong	len;	// 4 bytes
	ulong	data;	// 0x05040203
 }

Swizzle is apparently used to modify texture components processing like swizzle modifiers in pixel shaders. For example ArmA sky texture has green channel stored in alpha channel and inversed to take advantage from feature that in DXT5 64 bits are used for alpha channel in each block and 64 bits for RBG, giving double the accuracy to green channel as opposed to storing texture just normally.

Exact format of swizzle data is still unknown. swizzle data:

char channelSwizzleA;
char channelSwizzleR;
char channelSwizzleG;
char channelSwizzleB;

format of swizzle char:

bits 7-4 = 0;
bit 3 - "1" flag. All channel data must be set to 0xff;
bit 2 - "negate flag". Channel data must be negated.
bit 1-0 - number of color channel:
00 - Alpha channel
01 - Red channel
10 - Green channel
11 - Blue channel

for example (*_nohq.paa textures)

swizzle data is:

0x05 - Alpha, Negated, stored in Red;
0x04 - Red, Negated, stored in Alpha;
0x02 - Green, Stored as is;
0x03 - Blue, Stored as is;

PROCTAGG

  • Only ever seen with some DXT1 types
{
	char	"GGATCORP";
	ulong	len;	//  strlen(text)
	char	text	// NOT ASCIIz
}

this is a non asciiz string (not zero terminated)

example:

x = ((u+1)*0.5);
y = ((v+1)*0.5);
if (y<0.5) then
{
 sharpOut = 20;
 sharpIn = 60;
 offset = x-0.5;
 if (offset<0) then
 {
   edge = (1+offset)^sharpOut;
 }
 else
 {
   edge = (1-offset)^sharpIn;
 };
 res = edge*y*2;
}
else
{
 sharpOut = 20-40*(y-0.5);
 sharpIn = 60-125*(y-0.5);
 offset = x-0.5;
 if (offset<0) then
 {
   edge = (1+offset)^sharpOut;
 }
 else
 {
   edge = (1-offset)^sharpIn;
 };
 res = edge;
 sdCoef = y * 2 - 1;
 shoreDisappear = 1 - sdCoef^2;
 res = res * shoreDisappear;
};
a = 1;
r = res;
g = res;
b = res;

OFFSTAGG

  • Almost always present
{
	char  "GGATSFFO";
	ulong len;			// 16 * sizeof(ulong)
	ulong offsets[16];
}
Example:
= 6 entries. last 10 unused
256 x 128 Size=16384
128 x 64 Size=4096
64 x 32 Size=1024
32 x 16 Size=256
16 x 8 Size=64
8 x 4 Size=16

MipMap data is presented in 'blocks'. One or more 'blocks' exist in a pax file.

This tag declares where each of these blocks are in the file, relative to start of file.

The location of each block is already known, relative to the size of the previous block (if any). So, although almost always present in pax files, it is use, is redundant.

This tag always contains 16 ULONG offsets. Each one is a hard offset to actual mipmap data relative to start of file.

Not all entries are used (obviously) since most pax files contain less than 16 mipmaps. Unused offsets contain the value 0x00000000. There are no known examples of splattered offset entries. All offsets after the first 0 entry are 0 as well.


Palette

Palette
{
	ushort	nPaletteTriplets;					// always 0 except for index palette type
	bytes	BGR_Palette[nPaletteTriplets][3];	// only exists if nPaletteTriplets > 0
}

palette triplets when they exist, consist of BGR values. Note the reversal from the expected order.


Mipmap

Mipmaps are in contiguous blocks that extend to end of file.

There is nothing strange about Mipmaps. Each mipmap is simply a rectangular texture (almost always square) and each one conforms to 2^n dimensions.

Each mipmap defines increasingly poorer resolution. The highest (first) mimpap is THE texture, each successively smaller one is one quarter the size. It progresses in smallness down to a minimum of 2 x any other 2^n or, any other 2^n x 2. For a square texture, this is simply a 2 x 2 matrix.


Mipmap
{
	ushort	width;		// width of this mipmap
	ushort	height;		// height of this mipmap
	if (INDEX PALLETE)
	{
		if (width==0x4D2 && height==0x223D) // special 1234 x 8765 signature
		{
			ushort	width;		// actual width
			ushort	height;		// actual height
			// use -signed- lzss compression for this block (introduced for for resistance pax files.
		}
		//  else use runlength Compression for this block // used by demo and cwc pax files
	}

	if (width && height)
	{
		byte	size[3];	// size of texture data in file. this is 24-bit unsigned integer.
		byte	data[size];	// actual texture data compressed or otherwise
	}
};

The last mipmap is a dummy consisting of zero width and height with NO FURTHER DATA

The size triplet reflects the size of compressed data in the file not necessarily the actual size of the data.


Compression

ALL non DXT signatures are unconditionally compressed using signed LZSS. Index Pallets use this too, OR, runlength encoding.

There are two wrinkles to LZSS compression not encountered in other uses of the same algorithm (pbo, p3d, wrp eg).


  • The >1024 rule does not apply. ALL data is compressed. The end result is the smaller box sizes are most often larger on disk.
  • The checksum following the data (all data sizes are actually -4 their 'real' length) is SIGNED addititive. All other lzss checksums used elsewhere in bis are UNsigned additive.


example:

Type: RGBA 4:4:4:4 texture
AVGC: F5A9A9AB
256 x  128 Real Size 65536. Size in file  11770
128 x   64 Real Size 16384. Size in file   3521
 64 x   32 Real Size  4096. Size in file   1148
 32 x   16 Real Size  1024. Size in file    407
 16 x    8 Real Size   256. Size in file    169
  8 x    4 Real Size    64. Size in file     57
  4 x    2 Real Size    16. Size in file     22 <<<<<

the result of decompression of any type (lzo, lzss or runlength is encoded data. The encoding is, perhaps obviously,dependent on the paxType:


encoded sizes are a further means of compression.

  • width x height is the number of pixels to display. Since all output to a screen is ultimately expressed as RGBA 4 byte integers.
  • width x height x 4 is the size of the ultimate output IN BYTES.

Not so the encoded array.

  • INDEX width*height // each byte is an index to a color table
  • DXT1 width*height/2 // 1 nibble per pixel
  • DXT2 width*height // not used
  • DXT3 width*height // not used
  • DXT4 width*height // not used
  • DXT5 width*height // one byte per pixel
  • RGB4444 width*height*2 // 4 nibbles per color
  • RGB5551 width*height*2 // ditto
  • RGB565 width*height*2 // ditto (not used)
  • GREY width*height*2 // one byte alpha, one byte 'grey'
  • RGB8888 width*height*4 // straight rgba output (un-encoded)

Before Arma 2

DXT textures are stored "as is" in the file. Therefore the DXT data could be directly passed to the graphic hardware. For software decoding of DXT textures see DXTn compress/decompress

After Arma 2

DXT formats are potentially compressed.

(All other formats remain the same with unconditional lzss compression)

Arma 2 introduces LZO compression for DXT. The criteria for DXT-LZO compression is having the top bit of the width paramater set.

Note that under this circumstance, the width bit must be masked before any size calculations

This bit is set when size on disk for dxt formats != expected size . (See above table). It is either a 'safety bit' for the unusual circumstance of size being same, or, simply a flag to indicate lzo compression.

Either way, there are (currently) no known instances of dxt compression where sizes are same, and quite obviously, all unequal sizes must, by defintion, be lzo compresssed.

Note also, that this is, truly, conditional compression. Only larger dimensions (256x256) eg are treated in this manner. Lesser value mipmaps in the same pax file, remain un altered.

Index Palette Compression

If the file doesn't start with a known PaX type the data array of the mipmaps contain the indices to the color palette (which appears just before mipmaps and only for palette type).

TWO (2) types of compression are in force determined by the special structure of index pallette mipmaps (see above)

  • Standard LZSS.

if the signature for width and height IS 1234 x 8765 then standard lzss compression is used, using, the next four bytes as width and height.

otherwise:

A very basic "compression", which even can make the data slightly bigger, is used. The data is split into blocks of the following structure:

struct block
{
	byte flag;
	byte data[...];
}

The flag can be of two different types. If the most significant bit of flag is zero, it tells you how much bytes to read. If flag is 0x05 for example you have to read 6 bytes (always one more then the value of flag). If the most significant bit of flag is one it tells you how often the next byte is repeated. If flag is 0x82 for example the value after the flag byte is repeated 3 times (always one more than (flagvalue - 0x80)).

Note that with this, special, compression, there is no checksum.

Index palette Mipmaps can have mixtures of both types.


Addenda

Decompression Code

see Compressed LZSS File Format

HexDump

The 0x4747 format mentioned in this picture indicates index palette format, because 0x4747 is the "GG" of "GGAT" signature.

Paacformat.gif

Alpha channel interpolation

These two images visualize difference between alpha channel interpolation (FLAGTAGG header tag value).

FLAGTAGG = 1, interpolated alpha channel (default behaviour)

paa alpha channel default.jpg

FLAGTAGG = 2, alpha channel interpolation disabled

paa alpha channel no interpolation.jpg


Bibliography

Feersum's original posting on BIS forums: Paa/pac texture format documentation (dead link)
MSDN documentation on DXT1 textures: DirectX: Opaque and 1-Bit Alpha Textures
Squish Compression DXTn compress/decompress